If you are anything like me, at any point in time you have several browser windows open at once, many different tabs open in each browser, and several other programs lurking in your computer’s task bar which you are constantly switching between.

I work on my computer a lot. I use many different programs depending on my task at hand. I am constantly monitoring different sources of information, from RSS feeds, several different email boxes, social networking streams, and different blog commenting threads.

All of this means that I have a lot going, computer-wise. Sometimes all of this going on at once really puts a damper on my productivity because I have a severe lack of ability when it comes to multitasking.

What I finally tried the other day has given me hope that this mass confusion and ill-fated attempts at getting things done can finally have an end! I finally broke down and tried to set up dual monitors in my home office setup. While I am still learning to use it properly, I have already noticed a massive difference in my level of concentration and productivity.

As a blogger, there are several ways to use such a setup (which I am still learning) but I think there are many different ways a dual monitor setup can help someone be more productive. Here are 6 of them:

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1. Working and previewing at the same time

While working on a project (or article), you can set up dual monitors to use one monitor to work and use the other for previewing your work. For instance, when blogging using WordPress, if you hit preview, a separate window (make sure you open it in a separate window as opposed to a tab) will open containing a preview of your article so far. If you set up that window in the second monitor, every time you hit preview the page will just refresh. That way there is no switching between tabs or windows! A similar setup can be useful for a design professional.

2. Testing in multiple types of browsers

You can use a different browser in each monitor. For instance, I am currently using Firefox on one monitor and Chrome on the other (sorry Microsoft!).

I am doing that because certain sites run better or smoother on Chrome while I still enjoy the extensions and usability of Firefox but a coder or designer may be interested in viewing their work in multiple browsers simultaneously in order to see how it looks in each.

3. Testing multiple screen resolutions (color settings, etc.)

Yes, you CAN have different settings on each monitor. For designers this could be an awesome help! It all depends on what you need to see. If you have a hard time reading, set the resolution a bit lower on the one you do reading from and keep the other one at a more reasonable resolution.

4. Making a lot of phone calls & recording data at the same time

If you are constantly running down a phone list, it may be helpful to have a list constantly open in one monitor while working or recording data in the other one. Not having to constantly hit Alt-Tab (to switch between windows) or Ctrl-Tab (to switch between tabs) saves a LOT of time, believe it or not. Also it’s harder to lose your place if the view is never lost.

5. Getting work done while keeping up with what’s going on

I’m currently doing this one! I like having the ability to work while glancing up to see who’s saying what on Twitter or Facebook. I also like keeping my email off to the side for glancability without losing my place on what I am working on. Plus I like to keep my RSS reader over there.

I suppose someone could also keep the news on a separate monitor so you can keep up with it while working.

6. Being entertained while working

Today’s Internet allows you to watch many TV shows online. That doesn’t even count sites like YouTube! You can also have a movie in your DVD drive. I suppose you can be entertained on the side while working. Please note, this could be taken both ways. You can look at it like it’s stupid because you’ll be distracted and obviously lose any resemblance of productivity OR you can see it as a way to at least get SOMETHING done during down time.

To be honest, I’ve tried having video on while trying to work and I can’t do it, however I am sure there are those of you out there who can pull off some sort of light work while being entertained.

If you have the room, and you can afford it, go ahead and give dual monitors a try. I’m loving it so far! AND if you have any more productivity tips using dual monitors, let us know!

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Tzvi

February 1, 2010 at 11:05 am

I found that I can stretch the Word window to cover both monitors (I have one above the other). This enables me to use "split window" to view two parts of the same file. Alt-tabbing a different program will bring a second program to the front of one of the monitors. The Word document remains on top in the other monitor.

Set up a second monitor. At the moment I have it above my laptop monitor. Took a few minutes to figure out how to set it up. One (minor) issue that crept up - I've been using wordtab (I think I saw that on makeuseof.com too). One of the things I'd like to do is have two word documents open in front of me - one on each monitor. It looks like I'll have to disable wordtab for that. Any ideas?

I seem to have found a solution. I'll have to test it out to see if it works well though. I can stretch the Word window over both screens (I already mentioned that I'm trying second monitor above the first). After stretching word down or up thru both monitors, I can use the "split window" view. Afterwards, I can bring a second window to the front of the top or bottom monitor while Word remains at the front of the other one. Like I wrote, the jury is out on this, details later.

I remembered seeing this header on the newsletter, but didn't read the content. Today I was trying to figure out how to work more effectively on my website when I have to keep switching between multiple windows and I remembered it. Looked it over and read up on dual monitors. I think I'm going to give it a try. Thanks.

i've been using dual-monitors for the past 10 years or so, ever since collage; and can't seem to get work done without it.

just wanted to point out some tools i use regularly in order to enhance my dual-monitor experience...

1. UltraMon (by Realtime Soft Ltd.), allows taskbar to be displayed on both monitors as well as synchronizing screen-savers and a lot of other neat features.

2. Synergy (not sure the company, but can easily by googled), is a tool which acts as a virtual KVM (keyboard-video-mouse).. all you need is a private network setup between two or more computers, and synergy will automatically share the keyboard/mouse between the two computers. This tool is used less often; however very useful when i have two computers hooked up, one to each monitor, and both sharing the single mouse/keyboard on my desktop.

Tim I use a dual monitor set up at work and in addition to that I use the virtual desktop manager, which is a part of the powertoys for windows XP pack. This little "toy" lets you not only see 2 screens but actually 8. It gives you 4 different screen set ups to look at. I can basically open up 8 different word documents one on each screen and switch back and forth between any of them. You can have 4 different wall papers going also. It puts icons numbered 1-4 as well as an icon with a window pane on the tool bar. The window pane icon lets you see all 4 different screenshots at once. Pretty cool how you use it is up to you.

I like your ideas 1-4, but can't help thinking how ironic it is that an article about productivity suggests enabling the ability to work while glancing up to see whoâ€™s saying what on Twitter or Facebook, or watching videos while you work...
Anyway, after the day I've just had, I'd have to say that a big advantage of dual screens would be being able to troubleshoot a problem on one monitor, while having the support forums or help file open on the other. I suspect more users would use help files if they could do this.

Started working a multi-monitor setups from my job and spread to my home when i upgraded to a 22" monitor i used my extra monitor as my second. I learned of the programs that can help with productivity.

For me, the most important reason for dual monitors is rdp. Whether at work, or working from home, dual monitors allows you to have your remote desktop session open in one window and your local pc open in the other. This dramatically improves productivity. The examples for this scenario are endless, but any time you are waiting for an application to execute or a browser window to load, you can be doing something else.

Yeah, that works great. I used to do that at my old job before they decided to take Multiple monitors away (The head IT guy there deemed it to costly so we took all the dual monitors and put them in a closet to sit). It was a great tool though, I was able to have the remote desktop of the user I was helping on one screen and my tools, email, problem ticket information, reference guide, or whatever else I needed, up on the second screen.

I like to use the free version of the program multimon. I find it nice to have a toolbar on the second monitor, and especially like to have the button for sending a window to the other monitor with one click, instead of click and drag.

Great article, Tim. It's good to finally see some useful suggestions for using dual monitors. Most articles typically talk about setting up, but they don't get specific about practical suggestions. I'm gonna definitely use the WP suggestion. I already have Twitter and YouTube set up on my second monitor (here's my set up: http://twitpic.com/oek7a).

I paid like a hundred bucks for an AOC monitor. Though it might be great to have one of those 27" iMac montiors, dural displays just work a lot better. I can glance over at one web pages on one monitor while writing about it on another. Just awesome. I don't why it took so long to realize the benefits.

As you gaim more experience with dual monitors, I hope you write another article about it. Good ideas so far.

As an engineer, I use 2 monitors at work all the time. It is especially useful when I have an Autocad drawing open on one monitor and use the second monitor with Excel to create a bill of material for the drawing. All the engineers have 2 monitors now since it proved to be extremely effiecient use of our time.

Matt Dana

November 9, 2009 at 7:13 am

I'm tri-mon at home and dual at work. I actually really miss the third monitor when I don't have it. I use it to hold a number of useful Vista sidebar gadgets like my Facebook and Twitter feeds, a calculator, google reader, unit converter, and so on. It also comes in handy as a dedicated screen for testing in IE while using firefox/firebug on screen 2 and my text editor on screen 1.

Also, for those of us using a laptop in our setup, disconnecting the laptop could pose some nuisances such as having to reorganize open windows, etc. I like the setup and what I have open on each screen, but I am reluctant to mess up my organization by disconnecting my laptop!

After it's all said and done, I think the productivity afforded is worth it!

That's actually where I got the idea for this article. I've seen a lot of how-to articles out there about HOW to set it up but not as many about HOW to USE it effectively. SOOoo I did some research and then tried it myself.

I'm sure there are many more tips out there so I'm hoping some people will share them for us!

If you have multiple widescreen monitors you HAVE to at least try having one oriented vertically. There are VERY few tasks that aren't better on a tall monitor, especially one 20" or larger with larger resolutions. Coding, writing, photoshop (depending on dimensions of what you are editing), and web browsing is a ton better. Most websites are coded for a 1024 horizontal resolution in mind anyway. For reference a 20" widescreen is 1050 pixels horizontally.

Haha!Playing HoN i see.. HoN FTW! I have dual monitor setup at work..although they're both meant for doing my work faster.(i'm a tech support operator for an ISP) i use one monitor as my work desktop and the second one as remote desktop to my Ubuntu Machine at home..

I am a 30 something year old kid at heart. I have been working on and at computers ever since high school. I enjoy finding new and interesting sites that are useful to the every day person. I have been helping and training people on tech-related issues for years and…